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Video Producer: Shohini Bose
Video Editor: Mohd Ibrahim
Cameraperson: Athar Rather
Do you know about the Navnirman Andolan? Gujarat 1973-74? Okay, you would not know... but PM Narendra Modi, he must know... because he was a part of it...
A student strike against a fee hike in hostel food, became such a massive agitation against corruption across Gujarat, that in 3 months it led to the fall of Congress CM Chimanbhai Patel and his government.
In 1975 too, during the Emergency, as a student and RSS pracharak, Modi organised protests in Gujarat, spending months underground.
At the same time, in Delhi, his late colleague, Arun Jaitley, then a firebrand ABVP leader and DU Student Union President, was jailed for leading anti-Emergency protests.
Across India, thousands of students, many inspired by Jaiprakash Narayan, were on the streets – among them young Nitish Kumar, Lalu Yadav and Mulayam Singh – all youth leaders then.
Click on the player below for the full podcast.
So, what’s my point? The point is that for students to protest, agitate, express dissent against what they see to be wrong, is in a student’s DNA! When they are young, idealistic, sensitive, aware of what’s going on around them, and have a strong view about it, when they are full of energy, and unafraid, then, of course, they will PROTEST!
In fact, if something questionable was taking place in the country, and I was vice chancellor of a university and my students stayed SILENT, I would be worried. Because it’s the job of our universities to produce responsible citizens, and so, when faced with wrong-doing, they must protest. Peacefully. It's their right, it's their duty.
Measured on parameters such as student diversity, quality of faculty, student-teacher ratio, campus infrastructure, quality of research, job placement – these universities scored high in all of them.
And yet, a few months ago, this is what we saw in Jamia – police assaulting students in the university library. Similar police violence was seen Aligarh Muslim University too. And this is what we saw in JNU – masked attackers targeting students and property, while police did nothing.
Former Jamia Vice Chancellor Najeeb Jung, speaking to The Quint defends Jamia’s student protests – he says Jamia produces educated, responsible citizens of India, not mechanical robots. And so, if they want to bring something to the government’s attention, they will.
To those who give Jamia the tag of ‘anti-national’, Najeeb Jung points out that 30 Jamia students made it to IAS this year. And that Mahatma Gandhi pushed for the founding of Jamia in 1920 – the first nationalist college set up without British funding. After which came colleges like:
and students at each of these campuses took part in every major freedom movement.
In fact, the role of students from colleges across India in the freedom struggle are well documented:
Yeh Jo India Hai Na… whether it was a 100 years ago, in our freedom struggle, or 45 years ago during the Emergency, or just months ago, during the Anti-CAA-NRC protests, whether it was Modi and Arun Jaitley then... or Safoora Zargar and Meeran Haidar today... students have been India’s conscience keepers, and they must continue to do that.
Surely not...
The less we listen to our students… the more we will lose our way as a nation...
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)